Film Review
One of the finest examples of classic American film noir,
The Killers manages to combine the most alluring
cinematographic style with a thoroughly compelling thriller storyline.
The film, one of the few true film noirs from Universal, marked the
screen debut of 32-year-old Burt Lancaster, a one-time circus acrobat who
quickly became one of Hollywood's most iconic movie stars. It also
gave the virtually unknown Ava Gardner her first important screen role, a
femme fatale whose seductive beauty masks a heart of coldly vicious feline
duplicity. Production was supervised by Mark Hellinger, who was once
a successful journalist before he became an independent film producer, credited
with such great films as
The Roaring Twenties (1939).
Advertised as
Ernest Hemingway's The Killers, it
is in fact only the film's prologue (leading up to the shocking killing of
the Swede) which is the writer's work - taken from his short story of the
same title, first published in
Scribner's Magazine in 1927
. (Hemingway, rarely impressed by adaptations of his
work, was greatly impressed by the film, considering it one of the best examples
film noir.) The remainder of the film is entirely original, a taut
labyrinthine plot that was scripted by none other than the legendary film
director John Huston (he was denied a credit because he was then under contract
with another studio, Warner Brothers). In common with many film noir
dramas of this period, the film employs an extended flashback narrative structure,
similar to that used previously in Orson Welles's
Citizen
Kane (1941).
The Killers was directed by German émigré
Robert Siodmak, who is credited with some of the finest classic film noirs
- others include
The Spiral Staircase (1945),
The Dark Mirror
(1946) and
Criss Cross (1949). The influence
of German expressionism is keenly felt in Siodmak's inspired use of stark
shadows, unusual camera angles and harsh lighting, all of which give the
film an unsettling dreamlike feel, whilst heightening the bleakly oppressive
mood of pessimism and cynicism which is so quintessentially film noir.
In 1964,
The Killers was remade by Don Siegel,
with John Cassavetes, Lee Marvin and Angie Dickinson. Originally made
for television, the film was deemed to be to far too violent for the small
screen and was instead given a cinematic release. Today, this film
compares poorly against the 1946 original, which is almost universally acknowledged
as one of the great masterpieces of classic American film noir, and also
one of the most attention-grabbing and enjoyable examples of its genre. On
its initial release,
The Killers was an immense commercial and critical
success, and received four Academy Award nominations in 1947, in categories
that included Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Robert Siodmak film:
Cry of the City (1948)
Film Synopsis
Late one evening, two strangers arrive in a small New Jersey
town. They stop at a roadside café where they intend to
kill a man named Ole Anderson, also known as "the Swede".
When the target fails to turn up, the killers make their way to his
boarding house where he lies waiting for them, almost as if he wanted
to die. After Andersen's death, insurance investigator Jim
Reardon is assigned to look into his murder, to establish why he
should choose to make a chambermaid he barely knew the beneficiary of
his life assurance policy. By speaking to the people who knew
Andersen, Reardon begins to piece together his eventful past life - a
life soiled by violence, greed and treachery...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.